The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 12, 1949, Page 4

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4 PAGE FOUR d of hearing DmI y Alaska Empire » evening except Sunday by the NG COMPANY treews, Juneau, Alaska ing exasperation brought to a stop President | 0f Communist agi Vice-President | Managing Editor - Business Manager Second s HELEN TROY MO CTHY TROY crisis and emergency. | strike of a year ago and quotes Mr. | cast declaration that it perpetual alarm of emergency, They have watched with grow- great seaport after another activities of a small group The paper recalls the dock | Attlee’s broad- | “against the housewives the one by tators th he was THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE —JUNEAU, ALASKa Y SRR S COOK INLET BASIN 20 YEARS AGO T0 BE SURVEYED | JULY 12, 1929 SEATTLE, July 12. (P—The 47,500 A. Van Mavern, broker, was aboard the Spokane returning from a |square mile Cook Inlet basin will from THE EMPIRE TUESDAY, JULY 12, 1949 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple . beginning at 7:30 p. m. ] GLENN O. ABRAHAM, Worshipful Master; . n the Post ‘nl"n:.m\;_fiw‘mk‘y Second Class Matter, | and Lhcj common people.” It says these words are just | o JULY 12 5 | trip to Lynn Canal towns. be the first section of Alaska to diciuie! 3 4 i Seer_emy. - B vt UBHGRIFTION BATER, | e abaih i R LGB OR . o —_— e covered in the Army Engineers o o s monih, S0 Tone vear, si3o0 \ A - . Jack Kristan . Two hundred and nineteen tourists were sightseeing in Juneau. They | survey, looking to a large scale de- B P 0 ELKS ail 5.00; six months, in aavance, $7.50; Starlings and (nmnl'-lnl\?m . Rhoda Ann Reynolds ® | yere aboard the Prince Rupert. velopment program for the Terri-| e, Ry G ik thip i R Lanie S = . Mrs. Harold Chase . tory. Fy ;’ ;8 ;mezm Wb:xzhesdly :t i 3 hey will promptly notify | . M. L b S E (La Grange, Dlinois, % Elsle * Taking of Alaska census was announced to start in October. This announcement was made by| o @ DE%VEY ;I:K‘;;l ol SR U R | The other day we witnessed a fight between some | © Mrs. Ruth Ronald . AT Col. O. E. Walsh. new Division Exnltjed Rul W. H. BIGGS, e MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS starlings and a pair of flickers over a nesting place | ® R. F. Lundin . . Engineer, at Portland today. l er. W. H. i - & in a tree, and, as usual, the starlings won out. taking | ® Mrs. Rae Tabor o | Assistant District Forester B. F. Heintzleman returned on the| pearings are to be conducted at| SCCretary: A Ty e Lo e s Jor | over the flickers’ new home. . . ! Tahn from Speel River where he had taken R. A. Kinzie, A. J. Ela and | Anchorage, Kenai, KasHof, Homer, — wis a also the local news published There was ‘nly & KTRII hole in the tree to begin | ® (&8 S ST IR & [ 3. A. cameron to inspect work done on a power project. Seldovia and other points ty Col. BLACKWELL’S - | with, when the flickers came along and decided to T TR IR Lyle E. Seeman, District Engineec CABINET SHOP N A SENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1411 | make a nesting place. They went to work and made The Moose walloped the Elks B to 1 the previous night in a ball {at Anchorage, Col. Walsh said. U, ‘Ws H S 17 Main St. Phone 772 'it suitable to their | work | took over with the starling in nesting place in the |is finally driven o nesting place in the pair of starlings w: until all the unless, of cour: other neighorhood. BUSY WEEKEND COMING This coming weekend is to be a busy one. First, the Capital to Capital cruiser race is sched- We happen to uled to end Saturday aftérnoon or evening with the |unlike starlings. arrival of the craft from Prince Rupert on the last leg | credit for someone es they will ac serson has worked of this event Sunday the Soap Box Derby will be run off on the Twelfth Street Hill and hundreds will | B¢ F000 line The S g T afternoon. They that thoroughfare to watch the racers. oap by what Someone else Box Derby is sponsored by the Rotary Club and Daily | Alaska Empire and is one of the leading national s for young America. i for everyne. If our BRITAIN'S EMERGENCY The crippling strike on the docks of London has called for a state of emergency issued by King George. London newspapers agreed that a state of emer- declared stating that the dispute | from Europe. | boredom,” gency should be itself is fatuous, arising out of a Canadian affair |the dog is the only which does not concern this country’s dockers and | man. cannot be affected by them, and that the strike is a - political one engineered by Communists as economic sabotage at a when Great Britain’s situation is difficult enough as it is The News Chronicle said the some months is sk | figures except the British people “r(‘i time sumer. high blood pressure and a |by "‘e waShlng'On weight of 270 pounds which he has|get us some more votes in the anL\ Me" _Go_Round not been able to reduce. | election,” grinned the South Caro- | sion, during which period a series | Y It has also not been helped by |lina Senater. jof Kodachrome slides of the | long and grueling hours in govern-| Mayhank’s engaging frankness so|Salmon Creek Country Club fire | ment service. Krug had an out-|startled Welcott that he drr)“)edk“"d dedication of the Juneau By DREW PEARSON \Conunved m Fhye 1 Valley Authority, performed a skill- ful and difficult job as chairman | 'of the War Production Board, also each patient as an individual and work out a system of mass treat-|Served in the Navy 'I'"'o MAKES Hls ,Was no meeting on the Indepen- ment. Even the smbly-line| As Secretary of the Interlor, ‘“"Ce Day date, initiation of new technique, Dr. de Coursey suggests, Krug did a good job of battling| mbers will be conducted the, may have to be applied to medi- John L. Lewis, but since then poor | HRST MAJOR IAI.K ‘f°”°“mfl week. : cine health has forced him to be one of Refreshment committee for July | The doctors have also made pro- | the least active members of the| NA"ON’S AFFA'RS‘ 18 is composed of Dr. Kelly and gress in treating atomic radiation, Cabinet. After his Los Angeles Commander nger which attacks the blood cells and | fainting spell, he was wise enough causes hemorrhages. Tests on the | to take three months oft. But an- (By The As ,)“m,.d Press) animals at Bikini showed that, other two months was nec e AR, Tk g one pler o! S‘eel atomic hem ages can be stopped | after the Phoenix incident. Since!gayia in his first major polic by a common d:\t‘.kknrmn as tolui- (h("f' Krug is ]f.(\ frequently in his| cpeech since April, informed Fidl Alaska R R Br'dge Thereafter the prob-, office than any other Cabinet ofti- din blue dye. lem is to have enough blood plas-'cer. Yet either pride or devotion' ot his border with Greece. There| w ma on hand to administer mass|to duty forces him to keep up the|pnas peen talk that Tito, in Mos- l aShed cul ReporI transfusions. pretense of official activity ccw's doghouse for a year, is ready As fi roof that the atomic| The tragedy in the Forrestal case | for peace with the Athene covern-| ANGHORAGL, cu bomb as devastating as it has| was that friends encouraged him to | ment which Yugosiavia has helped ! pier of the steel Al been built up to be, Dr. de Coursey remain in office when many knew ry by her aid to the Com-'Liidge over the Tanana river on claims that a person might s he was desperately twed and on| myupist-led guerrilla rebellion. Ithe epur between Healy and Sun- even when directly underneath an the verge uf nervous exhaustion. “It has come to this: That we | trana washed ,out Sunday after- atomic explosion—provitied he were | Friends of “Cap” Krug would d"umm gradually close this frontier | noon. protected by a few feet of earth ‘“{1 to see that he does not make| ,nq safeguard the lives of our| A bridge building gang from or concrete. # s'b( g m“'”“ same mistake. | workingmen in this part of the Matanuska was enroute to make AT s ey ot e | country,” Tito told some 40,000 repairs, but the spur was expected edme out allys from | NEW U. S. CITIZENS | persons at Pola. Impbe out of e for a Sk six-inch, concrete *“f"l Atterney General Tom Clark's Such a move could be mtcrprmcn‘ The washout cuts off the Heaiy ter, lo ed even within the two-'campaign to educate naturalized! as a gesture toward the west. Tim‘mver Coal Company mine and the | m;ll» radius previcusly '\'U"Nd(‘r‘\’éA]mt‘rl(‘m)s on the dutles of citizen- | spoke at the same time of his need | Usibelli coal mine from the main fa |ship is getting vigorous support|for a loan from the West. How- | railrc e. It does not affect In both cases the shelters would|from New York’s radio stetion|ever, he said he wanted it made uimxnll?n‘:v ::—zvell i B protect those inside from the fl?m-[wno;\i Generoso Pope, who owns| clear that his is still a socialist | / o A ly gamme r '." Bu | the station, came to this country country with no inclination toward| Pike's Peak was discovered in shelters themselves ¢ 1) from Italy with nc parents, found | the West politically. He still claims 1806 by Gen. Zebulon M. Pike, and the terrific conc : his first job at the age of eight, | Trieste as Yugoslav and has no in- | was first ascended successfully in sey points out, would de but has now risen to become one of | tention of giving up his claims on | 1819 by Major S. H. Long | how much was absorbed a New York's most potent leaders. So| Austrian Carinthia, Tito told m(-l — - flected by the surrc 1 he feels that he knows something | world. | SCHWINN BIKES at MADZEN'S. ings. about the advantages of U. . citi- Note—Dr. de Coursey admits that! zenship and he wants others of the super atomic bomb, developed| New York's vast foreign-born com- | since Bikini, would increase the| munity to feel the same. casualties but not change the’ Run by his son, Fortune Pope, medical problem. The bigger the | WHOM broadeasts in foreign lan- | bomb, the more the patie , but 17 hours a day—longer than their treatment remains the same.lany other station in the USA Ll | During the Italian elections last | ANOTHER CABINET ILLNESS | year, WHOM arranged shortwave | The Truman Administration may have the unfortunate experience of | another sick cabinet member, { broadcasts from New York Ttalia: 1S to their relatives abroad, with the | result that thousands sent dem unless mm of Secretary of !h”‘ racy messages orally to the folks Interior “Cap” Krug take him in|the old country. It had an im- hand *n“mnl effect on turning the elec- | Krug's fainting spell while testi-|tion for democracy : fying before the House Public| Lands Committee last month was| CONGRESSIONAL TEAMWORK | not an isoiated but the third | The closed-dbor meeting of Sen- | time this has b ened publicly. | ate and House conferees on the While making a speech in Los| Public Housing bill was a model of Ar Krug w ed to stop, | how Congress should, and can, act retire from the r and could | when it wants to. A total of 102 not resume. Again Phoenix, | differences in Senate and House | Ariz., while speaking on a n versions of the bill were ironed out ! radio hookup, Krug was only r time. | minutes through his ven G.O.P. Representaive Jesse he started to keel over Wolcott of Michigan, leading C hand his speech over to someone |gressional friend of the real est else to read. lobby, went out of his way to co- After his recent illness betore]operate in expediting a joint re- the House Public Lanc It of the bill i [ Krug rested for half a However, Wolcott was suspicious back in the committee room Durnet made a heroic effort to resume , a Democrat, want- | testimeny. He was unable to d an amendment guar-| i tenants wouldn't be | A hulking figure of a m ind moved out of slums faster than| only 42, Krug looks the picture of | new public housing could be built health, but developed an athlete’s for them heart while a football star at Why do you want to put that Wisconsin, This 1s now aggravated in the bill?” he asked Maybank | the hole much bigger, shaping the place and making | sat by and watched, As soon as it was finished, however, | as the [lickers were gone for a minute, the starlings | As is customary, lings in the neighborhood have homes, | , the flickers give up and go to some |ion to Invariably | we could liken communists and socialists to a bunch munists and socialis might add that starling is an imvort into this country “The dog is the on asserts a naturalist. That the cost of living has been declining for quite ! standing record with the Tennessee| his world last night he intends to xeal | , R Crossword Puzzle : ACROSS 82, Regale 1. Dip 34. Wine cask 5. Bitter vetch 35. Military 8. So may it be student . Of a historical 37. Make believe period 39, Paradise 13. Ship channel 41. Before 14. Short for a 42, Ridicules man's name 45. Draw a cone 15. Remedy to clusion counteract 49, Egg-shaped poison 60. Story 17. Top cards 652. Appointment 18. Tranquillity 653. Chum Vocalists d of love needs. All the while the starlineg never interfering with the flicker and as soon the flicker returns to fight it out the nest and drives him out. Then | with all rcgular offlcers in at- neighborhood, chances are another | {endance last evening, Commander starling in the hole, and this keeos up until the flicker | chester Zenger presided at a well- | ut. If the flicker builds another | fjjjeq business session of Juneau neighborhood, chances are anohter | post 4, The American Legion. | ill take over, and that can go On Nymerous reports of committees were given and increased atten- hospital visitation . stressed. know some people who are not ! they will take all the iness transacted, > else’s hard work and in some |offer drums, formerly used by the tually take over what the otherl‘ segion Drum and Bugle Corps, to to produce. Going a step further the Juneau public school. A practice of the post's firing are perfectly willing to take over has worked to-produce. If they in preparation for selves as they do at trying to take something lh\t’Andlew Hildre at Evergreen Ceme- though spelled BAD, accent second syllable. ydoesn’t belong to them this would be a better world ‘Lery, following the services at the 1Challr: W. Carter Mortuary at 2| comparison between starlings and com- | o'clock tomorrow afternoon. With First Vice Commander Bob Druxman in command of the Ilr- |ing squad, its members include: S e John Parmenter, Joe Thibodeau, | animal that suffers from |Dr. E. L. Kelly, John Tanaka, This is true because' James Wendt and Chester Zenger. animal that associates closely with | Although services are to be con- | ducted at the mortuary, the fir- !ing squad, and other Legionnaires ,who will participate at grave-side | ceremonies, are asked to proceed to hown by almost all statistics a“dktle cemetery. bank balance of the average con-! wWith a new Legion year to be ‘ushcred in soon, emphasis * — | placed on the goal of an early| “Well, to be very frank, it mn‘,mpmbelsmp enrollment, Refresh- s isn’t too far-fetched, then we ! threatened objection, and the| municipal Airport were shown by Maybank amendment was adopted. | Bob Druxman. 1 The next regular meeting will be | | demon . Units At no times . Watch coatr S aotly Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle %; Higher 67. Let 2. English . C . Ameri . Englis . Call forth Indi DOWN composer C S 31. Bever 1. Spring 3. Relevant facts ¢ .00 o . Drinking vessel . Proverbs | //////% | ududh ] n.=.%== fl. fllll g==.%g.= { REGULAR MONDAY was | Among numerous matters of bus-| it was voted to| squad was held after the meeting | participation | 1\- ould work as hard at producing something for them- | in the military funeral for the late | was | ments were served at the conclu- | held Monday, July 18, and as there | I Actual preparation of plans will se under Col. James G. Truitt, head of a special survey division operating from the Portland divi- sion office. The Cook Inlet basin studies will include proposed navigation im- | Air mapping of Baranof Island had been completed by two amphibian ! 5rovements and the possibility of ‘p]ancs of the Alaska Aerial Survey Detachment. muli-purpose projects involving M iarge hydroelectric developments. | A ball mill of from 250 to 300 tons daily capacity would probably be | These studies are part of the prep- | installed on the Admiralty Alaska Gold Mining Company property at |aration of a “308 Report,” covering | Funter Bay, according to Sam Pekovich who had just returned from a |8eneral development of natural game. Fred Sorri and D. S. Weyand were elected members of the Juneau Volunteer Fire Department succeeding William Neiderhauser and Elliott Fxcmmlng who had resigned. | = High Quality Cabinet Work for Fiome, Office or Store Moose Lodge No. 700 Regular Meetings Each Friday Governor—JOHN LADELY Secretary— WALTER R. HERMANSEN | six months business trip to the States. resources of Alaska, similar to thc recent report proposing a multi- billion dollar program for the Columbia river basin. | b Walsh recently succ,eed;ed Col. D 'I L . E l' h # lThemn D. Weaver as Division En- ( rge Army Engineer | al y essons In ng is # L GORDON 'gi:;zlinn:’;: %heb;a.cmcyNorti.wflsl ! and Alaska. Weaver has been trars- | ferred to Germany. Under the new program most of the Alaska work previously done from the Seattle district office will| be transferred to Alaska. The Seattle office, however, will com- plete work on the various projects it now has underway. | Weather: low, 70; cloudy. High, 71; ‘WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “I saw him around the Fourth of July.” Say, “I saw him about the Fourth of July.” OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Forbade. Pronounce second syllable as OFTEN MISSPELLED: Paraffin; two F's. SYNONYMS: Youthful, young, boyish, juvenile, puerile. i WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: ‘ITINERARY (noun); a route; record of a journey. “The itinerary of | the lecturer covered twelve States.” of disease was an important part of a physican’s work. GEORGE BROS. Widest Selection of LIQUORS i PHONE 399 As early as the 6th century, a| noted physician called Alexander of Tralles taught that prevention | Q. When attaching one’s card to a wedding gift, is it necessary to !writ,e the bride’s name on th envelope? A. No; it is not necessary, but it is all right to do so. Q. Should dancing be mentioned in the invitations if it is to follow | a reception? A. Yes. Q. Is it necessary that the hostess give favors to the guests at a | “Say It With Flowers” but | home luncheon? | «SAY IT WITH OURS!” | A. No; this is entirely optional. A e Juneau Florists Phone 311 ————————————— The Erwin Feed Co. Office in Case Lot Grocery | LOOK and LEARN ¥ ¢ coroon 1. What is the difference between a “compliment” and a “comple- | ment”? Phone 704 M | 2. What name was applied to the Medieval wars between the Chris- tians and the Moslems? | HAY, GRAIN, COAL 2. What is the oldest city founded by Europeans in the United and STORAGE | States? . 4. Over how much area do the roots of a large matured sequoia tree | spread? Call EXPERIENCED MEN { 5. What name is applied to a painting done on a wall? Alaska JANITORIAL Service [ ANBWILE: FRED FOLETTE 1. A compliment is an expression of admiration or flattery; a com- { plement is that which completes. Phone 247 2. The Crusades. — 3. St. Augustine, Fla., settled by Spaniards in 1565. 4. Often between two and three acres. STEVENSQ | 5. A mural or fresco. ! 7 g 3 o % LADIES’—MISSES’ | The flag should be displayed dur-| The Mojave desert in south- READY-TO-WEAR png school days in or near every |eastern California is an area oi Seward Street Near Third | school house. about 15,000 square miles. The Charles W. Carter Mortuary , Fourth and Franklin Sts. EYES EXAMINED LENSES PRESCRIBED ! l DR. D. D. MARQUARDT OPTOMETRIST | Second and Franklin Juneau PHONE 136 L PHONE 506 FOR APPOINTMENTS ! i 1 | R Y | ‘ Card Beverage Co. | ; Wholesale 805 10th St. PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT Oldest Bank in Alaska | 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1949 The B. M. Behrends Bank Safety Deposit | Boxes for Rent COMMERCIAL SAVINGS for MIXERS or SODA POP Casler's Men's Wear Formerly SABIN'S Stetson and Mallory Hats Arrow Shirts and Underwear Allen Edmonds Shoes Skyway Luggage BOTANY 'lml CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men R. W. COWLING COMPANY Dodge—Plymouth—Chrysler DeSoto—Dodge Trucks i A. C. JOHNSON | as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA | EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING Present this coupon to the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: “MR. PEABODY AND THE MERMAID" Federal Tax—12c—Paid by the Theatre SHAFFER'S Phone 14—YELLOW CAB CO.—Phone 22 SANITARY MEAT and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and FOR BETTER MEATS RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. ‘3_,5'"‘33,“_‘9 ee very WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! "“The Rexall Store"” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos—Musical Instruments and Supplies ..Phone 206 ..Second and Seward.. Wall Paper Ideal Paint Store Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt JUNEAU’S FINEST LIQUOR STORE BAVARD'S Phone 689 The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms 1 at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O PHONE 555 1 Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Remington Typewriters SOLD and SERVICED by J. B. Burford & Co. “QOur Doorstep Is Worn by { Satisfied Customers” FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES — GAS — OIL Juneau Motor Co. Foot of Main Street MAKE JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM a daily habit—ask for it by name Juneau Dairies, Inc. Chrysler Marine Engines MACHINE SHOP Marine Hardware Chas. G. Warner Co. HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 American Meat — Phone 38 To Banish “Blue Monday” To give you more freedom from work — TRY Alaskz Laundry DR. ROBERT SIMPSON OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined—Glases Fitted SIMPSON BUILDING Phone 266 for Appointments H. S. GRAVES The Clothing Man LEVI'S OVERALLS for Boys

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